Friday, March 23, 2007

Animal 'Rights' - They can't 'bear' to let Knut live.

There is probably no more heart wrenching story in the press at the moment - especially considering we Brits are far more concerned about animal's lives than people's.

Polar Bear cub Knut, born in Berlin Zoo, was rejected at birth by his mother. His brother, similarly rejected, died - but zookeeper Thomas Doerflein refused to let Knut suffer the same fate. Bottle feeding him, the German zoo keeper fought to keep the baby bear alive, even strumming Elvis hits on his guitar as he watched over him.

The result is nothing short of miraculous. The adorable bear survived, despite the odds. Today, Knut was presented to the public for the first time.

It sounds like a fairytale story - but not everybody is happy to see Knut beat the odds.

Animal Rights Activists demand that "the bear should die."

Proving once again that the 'Animal Rights' scum have no interest in protecting the lives of animals, they're demanding that the zoo murder poor little Knut, claiming that it is "unnatural" that the bear should have survived his mother's rejection.

Despite the fact that Polar Bears are endangered, the 'Animal Rights' activists claim that nature should have taken it's course - and since it hasn't, the zoo should do 'the right thing' and put Knut down.

Just the mere idea makes my head spin. How could so called 'Animal Activists' want to slaughter Knut? He's a tiny, innocent bear. It just goes to show that these murderous protesters value their deranged 'principles' over the lives of the animals they laughingly claim to protect.

They are unmitigated, disgusting scum. If there was any justice in the world, those bastards would get their wish and encounter Knut face to face in a few years time - when he's grown into an aggressive, 1,300 lb adult bear and has an appetite!

1 comment:

Gayla said...

Thank you so much for writing this entry. I have been following this story of cute, and miraculous little Knut's life. How lucky we were to have someone like the Berling Zoo's Thomas Dörflein have the "hueavos" to do the right thing.
Knut will have a good life. Maybe not the life intended for him, but at least he will LIVE and be cared for well.
Thank you again,
Gayla